Note: The Inner Harbor suddenly turned milky green-white last year, all the fish died, and a 'rotten egg' odor was in the air, in coastal Baltimore (Maryland), on the East Coast, mentioned in the 2013-07-18 update. That was the chemocline rising abruptly to the surface, smothering all the fish and releasing hydrogen sulfide and methane that had accumulated at the bottom into the air. Shortly after that, an anomalous number of people started being found dead in the Inner Harbor. No coincidence...

Quote: "The Oregon Department of Agriculture is trying to figure out what killed thousands of honeybees in Sherwood last weekend. A mass of the dead bees were found scattered along on Highway 99 at Sunset Boulevard on Sunday."

Quote: "Data collected from 2007 to 2011 on the boreal chickadee, olive-sided flycatcher and rusty blackbird 'showed high extinction probabilities in Adirondack wetlands,' according to a Wildlife Conservation Society researcher’s findings, recently published in the journal Northeastern Naturalist. Adding data collected since 2011, researcher Michale Glennon found that the number of wetlands occupied by the rusty blackbird, gray jay, yellow-bellied flycatcher, olive-sided flycatcher and black-backed woodpecker had declined by 15 percent or more since 2007, the Adirondack Daily Enterprise reported Saturday."

Quote: "However, he expressed doubt there would be any outcome, going by the previous discovery of 60 turtle carcasses on Pulau Tiga in Kudat that had yet to produce results. Alin was the one who made public the earlier discovery on March 22."

Quote: "Thousands of dead fish appeared overnight at the Salt River, which happened to have its clean and clear waters, green and with a strong smell of rotten."

Quote: "The worker saw that the water had changed color. There were lots of dead fish and scavengers were feasting..."

Note: When the water suddenly changes color like that and it smells 'rotten', that is very highly likely the chemocline rising abruptly to the surface, which smothers all the fish and releases methane and hydrogen sulfide that has accumulated at the bottom into the atmosphere. The same thing happened in the Inner Harbor in coastal Baltimore (Maryland), as mentioned in the 2013-07-18 update. Shortly after the Baltimore incident, aberrant numbers of people began being found dead in the harbor there - not a coincidence. Some lakes in the Philippine Islands have also experienced this problem.This will happen to bodies of water all around the world and as it does there will be more and more methane and hydrogen sulfide belching into the atmosphere. That's the ancient extinction event that is upon us now. When this happened during the Permian-Triassic, around 90% of all species on the planet died. I don't mean 90% of EACH species died - as in 'the human race can go on if 90 percent of us die'. I mean 100% of 90% of species died, as in '100% of the human beings that live on the surface of the Earth are going to die.'

Quote: "There's something fishy going on in our local waters. No pun intended. According to The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission: six dolphins, a shark, a humpback whale and multiple manatees/sea turtles have washed up in the last two weeks."

Quote: "On a bigger scale, 1200 dolphins have been found dead from New York to Florida since July - up from the average 180 a year."

Note: There are plenty of PEOPLE mysteriously dying in Florida too. You'd think people would pay more attention to that, but it appears that people aren't as interested in staying alive as one might expect...

Quote: "A dead 15-foot whale washed up on a Long Island beach over the weekend, officials say. The adult female pilot whale was found at about 2 p.m. Sunday east of Coopers Beach in Southampton, officials from the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation say. A necropsy found no signs of trauma; a cause of death was still being determined."

Note: Much like all the people being found dead in or near bodies of what with no signs of trauma...

Quote: "While not an overall first, this video of two oarfish might be the first footage of living oarfish in near-shore waters. 'It’s very rare,' Binder said. 'I don’t know of any records of people seeing two come ashore, although they’ve been reported in pairs. But I don’t know if anybody has seen them live like this.' Oarfish are said to be able to reach 50-plus feet in length and inhabit depths of 1,500 to 3,000 feet. When the deep-water creatures venture into shallow water, as they did in this case, it usually means they are injured or dying. Sure enough, these two oarfish wound up beaching themselves and dying, but not before giving a group of tourists a once-in-a-lifetime encounter that lasted 20 to 30 minutes, even though most were unaware of what they were looking at."

Note: They've been washing ashore dead here and there along the West Coast prior to this, but this is the first time they've washed ashore dead after first being seen alive, at least as a pair. Hydrogen sulfide and methane are rising from the depths, so deepwater creatures like these will get hit hard, and these two may have been fleeing a deepwater environment that is becoming unsurvivable for them. Other bottom-dwelling or deepwater creatures are dying too, like starfish, sperm whales, oysters, coral, giant squid...

Quote: "The animal rescue home is desperate to find out what's making its dogs deathly ill. Two dogs have died, five others became extremely sick and vets cannot describe what is making the animals sick..."

Quote: "April 4, located in Haikou City, Hainan Province, the revitalization of U.S. homes South River Bridge at One large area of dead fish, the formation of banded, the river extends over one kilometer in length, and distribute stench."

Note: In the Permian-Triassic extinction event - similar if not identical to the one now ongoing - even insects took a big hit. We shouldn't expect a whole lot to survive. Some insects and bugs, some plants, some fungi, lots of bacteria, probably some reptiles, possibly some small fast-reproducing mammals like rats. That might just be about all that can possibly survive one of these powerful extinction events. Creatures almost certain to die off entirely: all primates including humans, whales and porpoises and dolphins, most species of fish, penguins, most or all species of birds, large mammals like rhinos and tigers and elephants and horses and cows, giant sequoias, and much, much more...

Note: The same thing happened right across the street from me in early January of 2011. I smelled something odd and within a minute or two a flock of birds dropped dead out of the sky and smacked into the roof of my neighbor's garage. Birds are very sensitive to gases in the air - thus the 'canary in a coal mine' thing - because they have rapid respiration and low body mass. Birds dropping dead from the sky has happened numerous times in areas all around the planet, especially since 2010. So many carrier pigeons have disappeared over the ocean between Britain and Scotland that they now call that area the 'Birdmuda Triangle', as mentioned in the 2012-08-29 update...

Note: Two of them had oil on their bodies, and two more may have. Okay, let's just say oil killed the crap out of those four. That leaves 44 more dead dolphins, just in March. Last year there were 15 dead dolphins in this area, so just in March alone this year there were more than three TIMES that number of dead dolphins. This area is right on the Gulf of Mexico. Numerous PEOPLE have been found mysteriously dead all around the Gulf Coast too - in Alabama, Texas, Georgia, Mississippi, Louisiana, and especially Florida - and none of them had oil on their bodies...

Quote: "The victim found three Belgian horses dead outside the fence of a remote area off of Gill Hollow Road in Beccaria Township. Further, a 10-month-old colt was found dead on March 24; an 8-year-old stallion on March 26; and a 2.5-year-old philly on March 27. All three horses were healthy prior to being found dead."